Harriet Beecher Stowe Links

A
Celebration of Women Writers: Harriet Beecher Stowe page biography,
links and related information.
A Visit to Our "Other Neighbor": Harriet Beecher Stowe
An article from The Correspondent by Sean E. Marshall about a
visit to Stowe's house.Harriet
Beecher Stowe info at University of Virginia, features letters
written by Stowe, articles on her work, a breif biography. An
excellent site!Harriet Beecher
Stowe: A Little Bit of a Woman A good article
by Barbara Smith, features a longer biography than on this site,
including some analysis of Stowe's work . This is a great introduction
to HBS.A
Site featuring Stowe's house-- information, photos, links.
From Trinity Information Services. The Harriet Beecher Stowe
Center a nonprofit educational institution that operates the
restored Harriet Beecher Stowe House and the Stowe-Day Library.
Seperation of Families this is a great article. It is from The
Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin; presenting The Original Facts and
Documents Upon Which The Story Is Founded, by Harriet Beecher
Stowe, 1853. Uncle
Tom's Mothers-- discussion, including pictures, of the
mother figures in Stowe's novel. Very important for any scholar
of this story to think about. Stowe
bibliography a good list of works by and about Stowe, includes
also links to other works that would be interesting for the context
of her work, like links to Fredrick Douglass sites.
Another Stowe Bibliography from Celebration of Women Writers--
This is a very complete list, features works by and about Stowe,
articles, books, etc. Stowe's
gravestone see the stone where Stowe is buried-- (allright
so it's a little morbid, still interesting! You can also see Louisa
May Alcott's stone from her
links page)E-Text
of Uncle Tom's Cabin-- at VirginiaSojourner Truth
the Libyan Sybil an article written by Stowe about Sojourner
Truth , former slave and very passionate speaker for women's,
in particular black women's, rights. Housed at the Afro-American
Almanac. Click here to
read a "found poem" from one of Truth's most famous
speeches, "Ain't I a Woman?"

Last update: May 2003

Note: Links frequently move, or disappear entirely. No links
collection is ever easy to update. If one of the above links doesn't
work, try another. If you still can't find what you need, try
a good search engine-- I like the Mamma
Search Engine for new pages, and Google.com
but some links will be "so-so". Then, remember to try
the library! Not everything is available online. You sometimes
need to pick up a real book.